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Friday, September 22 Legally blind runner says she feels free on track
By Adrian Wojnarowski
Special to ESPN.com
SYDNEY, Australia -- Marla Runyan marches to the buffet line in the athlete's dining hall on a mission for a side of broccoli, only to pile peas and spinach on her plate. She sits down, takes a bite and let's out a long sigh. Get up, try again. The colors get her every time. |  | | Marla Runyan suffers from Stargardt's Disease, which has stripped away her sight since age 9. | Welcome to the life of Marla Runyan, the most unrelenting athlete in these Olympic Games. When is it ever easy to be the United States runner in the 1,500 meters? Try the inside lane of an Olympic track, pushing and prodding for position in the 1,500 meters. "It's the one place where I feel a sense of freedom, where I'm independent," Runyan said. Runyan is legally blind, suffering from Stargardt's Disease, a degenerative disorder slowly stripping away her sight since her ninth birthday. In the history of the Olympics, no athlete has made the miraculous crossover Runyan's done, a Paralympian turned Olympian. Four years ago, she cleaned up in those disabled games. Two years later, she had a terrible knee and foot injuries as a heptathlete. Eventually, a coach watched her run the 1,500 meters, and told her she had the potential to do the unthinkable for a Paralympian: get to the Games. The Games. When she won the The Pan Am Games a year ago, she stumbled into the stands to find her coach. She searched. He screamed. She chased the voice. Finally, she found him and dissolved into his arms. This is Runyan's way. She comes and comes, never slowing, never stopping. How else could she make it here? "I'm not a klutz," she said. "I can maneuver around people, but whenever there's any contact on the track everyone points a finger to me. Hey, there were incidents in 1996 and 1984 with Mary Slaney at the Olympics and I wasn't in any of those races. If you put 12 very fast people in lane one, there's going to be contact." Life isn't so easy for her in the Athlete's Village, and finding vegetables is the smallest of her struggles. Sometimes, it's strange. As a Paralympian, the disabled athletes are forever reaching out with a helping hand. Why wouldn't they? After all, they'll probably need one a little later. For the first time, she's carrying a cell phone with her at the Olympics. All the athletes were given one. As she fumbled for hers in the middle of a Team USA press conference, it was easy to see a touch of panic on her face. Was the silver phone turned on? Would it start ringing and interrupt her teammates talking to a packed room of reporters? Finally, she set it down on a table. If it was on, it was a mystery. "I just can't read those numbers, or the display," Runyan said. "I've never owned one. They gave us these here. ...With my magnifying glass, I can see some of the words in the display, so one night I just sat on my bed for an hour or so with my magnifying glass figuring it out." Mostly, she senses, the rest of these Olympians look a little warily on her. After all, they're used to walking shoulder to shoulder with personal perfection. Unless Runyan takes the time to tell her story, people she's met can't understand why she walks past without so much as a nod. She can't see faces. Unless Runyan takes the time to tell her story, a photographer pushing her to peer into his camera lens can't understand why she's staring into space. She isn't a contender for a medal, and really, these Olympics aren't about winning and losing for her. This was a race for the starting line, and understand, there will be no loneliness for this long distance runner. The cards and e-mails pour in for her, thousands and thousands of disabled people telling Marla Runyan that they're with her on the track in these Olympics. "I understand that I'm running for a lot more than just myself," she said. Adrian Wojnarowski is a columnist for the Bergen (N.J.) Record and a regular contributor to ESPN.com
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